UK Prime Minister Theresa May is having a brutal week, but her lack of popularity with the cyber crowd stretches back far longer than that.

Most recently, she has been dealing with yet another Brexit-related crisis after chief Brexit negotiator David Davis and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson both resigned within a 24-hour period. The resignations are a result of frustrations from hardliners, who feel May’s proposals amount to a “soft Brexit” from the European Union. In his resignation letter, Johnson wrote that the Brexit “dream is dying, suffocated by needless self-doubt.” President Trump managed to further damage May’s standing, saying on Tuesday morning that it’s “up to the people” whether May stays in power or not and that Johnson is a “friend” who has been “very, very nice to me.” For now, it appears the Conservative Party isn’t going to try to oust its leader. May is also on thin ice for her joint bombing of Syria back in April, which she called “right and legal,” plus her insistence on hosting Trump—who is deeply disliked in the UK—later this week. Over the past 90 days, “Theresa May” has just a 28 percent positive score on Twitter. –Alex Shultz

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